Archive for the ‘Gardens – Flower’
September 12, 2011
By: Michael McGroarty
Category: Gardens - All Season, Gardens - Butterfly, Gardens - Cottage, Gardens - Flower, Gardens - Herb, Gardens - Other, Gardens - Rain, Gardens - Summer, Gardens - Urban, Gardens - Vegetable, Gardens - Water
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If you are preparing beds for landscaping around your house this article should simplify the process for you. I say that because of everything that is written about this subject, some of it is accurate, some of it is just plain wrong, and much of it is much more complicated than it needs to be. I like to think of myself as Simple Simon. I find the easiest, yet most effective way to do things, and they work.
Let’s assume that the area where you are planning your bed is now planted in grass. How do you get rid of the grass? Chemicals or no chemicals? Chemicals are easy, so we’ll look at the chemical method first. (more…)
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September 10, 2011
By: Nicholas Tan
Category: Gardens - All Season, Gardens - Butterfly, Gardens - Container, Gardens - Cottage, Gardens - Flower, Gardens - Herb, Gardens - Hydroponics, Gardens - Indoors, Gardens - Japanese, Gardens - Other, Gardens - Rain, Gardens - Summer, Gardens - Urban, Gardens - Vegetable, Gardens - Water
Organic gardening is the exact same as regular gardening except that no synthetic fertilizers or pesticides are used. This can make certain aspects difficult, such as controlling disease, insects, and weeds. Organic gardening also requires more attention to the soil and the many needs of plants. Organic gardening starts with the soil. Gardeners must add organic matter to the soil regularly in order to keep the soil productive. In fact, compost is essential to the healthiness and well being of plants grown organically. Compost can be made from leaves, dead flowers, vegetable scraps, fruit rinds, grass clippings, manure, and many other things. The ideal soil has a dark color, sweet smell, and is full of earthworms. Some soil may need more natural additives than regular compost can give, such as bonemeal, rock phosphates, or greensand. A simple soil test will tell you the pH balance and which nutrients you will need to use.
One thing that makes even gardeners that are very serious about organic gardening reach for pesticides is insects on their plants. The best way to defend plants against insects is to take preventative measures. One thing that can be done is to make sure plants are healthy and not too wet or dry because insects usually attack unhealthy plants and if healthy, they can often outgrow minor insect damage. A variety of plant types is a good idea to keep pests of a particular plant type from taking out the entire garden. (more…)
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September 09, 2011
By: Jules Sims
Category: Gardens - Container, Gardens - Flower
Bamboo has become such a current lodge in current time; not only can you grow and like it but it’s use in other areas such as timber carpet and as blinds is quickly ahead in popularity. Then there’s the human type in the influence of musical posse Bamboo Manalac which just like it’s bury namaesake, is climbing in the popularity ratings!
So what about wicker orchids? It would possibly shock many plot enthusiasts the cane orchids even exist but they certainly do! In some areas they are considered rather of an annoyance but in universal, they outshine as a decorative workshop, enhance any flower arrangement and emit a distinct aroma.
Bamboo orchids can be found scattered throughout areas in southern Asia and the placatory islands. They are a popular form of decorative works in Hawaii and be found in countries such as Costa Rica.
Bamboo orchids can be a little fussy to grow as orchid lovers in the western world are verdict out but essentially, by next some well-damaged guidelines, they can be adults with good winner. (more…)
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September 03, 2011
By: Jaden Sloan
Category: Gardens - Container, Gardens - Flower
What is more beautiful than seeing a home or building with an arch of climbing roses in the landscaping? Climbing roses are one of many plants that branch out and intertwine themselves among arches, trellises, or even buildings and railings. They can add a great landscape element to any foundation.
Would you like more information about climbing roses? It is easy to learn about this great beauty. First of all, there are many types of climbing roses. They range in color, texture, and look. They also range in hardiness as well. Of course, you need to know what you are looking of in your climbing rose. Most important is knowing your hardiness level. This tells you what will grow in your area. Also as important is to pick varieties that will grow in the element you are placing them. What type of soil will you use? Will the area have full sun, partial sun, or will it be in shade. (more…)
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August 31, 2011
By: Juliet Spalding
Category: Gardens - Flower
To make sure that your respected roses stay in the best of wellbeing, minimally admire these tips.
1. Black Spots on Leaves
This disease is generally known as black pimple. Black acne showed as circular with fringed edges on grass. They begin the plants to golden. Remove the infected flora and pluck up any fallen plants around the rose. Artificial sprays averts or cure this kind of rose disease.
2. Stunting or twisted infantile canes
Known as powdery mildew, this is a fungal disease that covers plants, stems and buds with airstream hang sallow powder. It makes the plants ringlet and break purple. Spray with Funginex or Benomyl to remedy this fungal disease. (more…)
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August 22, 2011
By: Joshua Santor
Category: Gardens - Flower
Under this right, we recommend to discuss of the plants generally known, in communal dialect, as Geraniums, counting those horticulturally and botanically known as such, and Pelargoniums. Between these there are many detailed and imaginary distinctions, which are only interesting to botanists, and oblige not disquiet the amateur. The factual geraniums are herbaceous. For chance farming, their healing must be the same.
For the pelargoniums, we are largely grateful to the Cape of Good Hope; the geranium is found, in some of its varieties, in Asia, Europe, and America; two of the family, our “rough geraniums,” being common to us all as among the squally plants of skip.
The scarlet, or amulet geranium, so called from the incline of its plants, and the dimness marking of its grass, is a very common and standard view bury. The rose, oak, and nutmeg geraniums are regularly adult for their fragrant trees, and for their toughness, as they can continue more hard habit than most plants. (more…)
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August 20, 2011
By: James Sawyers
Category: Gardens - Flower, Gardens - Summer
Most people finish a great agreement of time and stab forecast their summer gardens. Whether you are planning a summer patch that is proposed to awe and amaze all those who direct to capture a peek or plainly annoying to concept a summer backyard that will inspire you when you survive to take a moment and glance around, charming in the fruits of your workers there is no purpose you should withhold on the planning play as it may confirm detrimental to the global realize. If you are looking for habits to make your summer patch sputter the absolute best way is to give it the assiduous planning and attention to present it deserves.
First and principal you require to intend more than the plants that will go in your summer patch. Whether you are planting flora, grass, shrubs, leaves, fruits, or vegetables you necessity still require to intend the boundaries, close, landscaping, and design of your summer backyard. You should also deem the accents in your lawn and patch field that will platform certain aspects of your summer patch while diminishing the effects of less attractive skin of your summer patch or the inborn landscape of your lawn.
Arrange your summer backyard in a style that is attractive. Whether you are with traditional rows for a vegetable patch or raised landscaping boxes in exclusive areas along the exterior of your home there are ample of opportunities to dowry your summer backyard in as attractive of a style as possible. Take great time and tending that you do just that when planning your plot. You want your summer plot to be a place to show off to links and neighbors. Arranging it attractively so that it doesn’t detract from the remainder of your landscaping pains is an adept move-even if your summer plot is intended to be purely functional as a vegetable backyard. (more…)
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August 17, 2011
By: Jasper Sayer
Category: Gardens - Flower
Flower gardening is becoming more and more popular every day. Flowers can brighten everyone’s day, they smell nice, and are a great hobby. Flower gardening is simple, inexpensive, and loads of fun. Flower gardening can be done for yard decoration, simply as a hobby, or even professionally.
There are some decisions that have to be made before even flower gardening can be started. You must decide if you want annuals that live for one season and must be replanted every year, or perennials that survive the winter and return again in the summer. When buying and planting, pay attention to what kind of flowers thrive in your climate as well ass the sun requirements.
When flower gardening, you must decide what type of look you want before planting. For instance, mixing different heights, colors, and varieties of flowers together in a “wild-plant style” will give your garden a meadow look and can be very charming. If short flowers are planted in the front of your garden and work up to the tallest flowers in the back you will have a “stepping stone style”. (more…)
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August 15, 2011
By: Joey Singer
Category: Gardens - Container, Gardens - Flower, Gardens - Indoors
According to the National Gardening Association, 91 million households participated in some form of do-it-yourself lawn and gardening activity in 2005, spending an average of $387. Over the past decade, an increasing percentage of this total has gone towards container gardening.
Containers offer a versatile form of gardening that fits into any lifestyle and yard size. City dwellers can use them to brighten up lifeless balconies, roof decks or front stoops, while those with more space can decorate high-traffic spaces and incorporate them into lawn and garden areas for added drama and flair. Because of the multitude of options on the market, container gardens are an easy way to add a splash of color to any outdoor space, big or small.
Roses are among the most spectacular and rewarding choices for a container because of their combination of color, fragrance and season-long blooms. Also, with advances in hybridizing, roses are easier to grow than ever before. Look for the All-America Rose Selections (AARS) rose logo as a “seal of approval,” which indicates that the rose excelled in the most difficult plant trial in the world: two years of testing in 23 gardens across the country, representing all climate zones. By performing well against 15 criteria including fragrance, ease of maintenance and disease resistance, AARS roses are proven to be the very best.
Tom Carruth, director of research at Weeks Roses and hybridizer of eight AARS Winners in the past nine years, provides the following tips for building the perfect container rose garden: (more…)
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August 10, 2011
By: Jules Sims
Category: Gardens - Container, Gardens - Flower
The prospective orchidist will want to have common education of the orchid family and an appraise of the individual members with whom, he may want later to become more tightly acquainted. The scale of excellent is thick, since there are from fifteen to twenty thousand species.
The orchid family varies typically in territory, ranging throughout the tropics, over the calm zones of both hemispheres, and even feat into the fringes of the Arctic. There is an alike large change in category, with some systems of classification.
The first division is into monopodial and sympodial groups, referring to the habit of increase. The monopodial, including the Vanda and Aerides, grow continually from a central crown, which eventually appears atop a long stem that has frequently alone its reduce plants. Phalaenopsis, though monopodial, is stemless, but yearly grows a twosome of leaves from the characteristic crown. (more…)
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August 07, 2011
By: John Smi
Category: Gardens - Container, Gardens - Flower, How To Grow...
Imagine waking up on a stunning, sunny morning in delayed April. You can hear the birds singing. Smell the airiness of the dew on the lawn and see the trees and plants growing. Then, look across your yard and see an award of loyal tulips immovable at awareness, waving a signal in the morning breeze.
No count what country you may live in, with a little creativity and forecast, you can mean and grow a multihued, partisan tulip plot. There are many different shades and insignia of tulips that are commercially untaken from the important tulip growers that can loan themselves to a plot. No issue the nationality or ethnic background, a quaint tulip backyard can display the insignia of the identify or area hues that are important to your heritage.
Let’s say that you want to construct an American loyal tulip backyard. Simply construct and works a letter of azure, red and colorless tulips. Candidates for downcast tulips enter the gorgeous Skagit Valle tulip, whose colorless petals are edged with azure. You can also add indigo hyacinths for more incline. (more…)
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July 28, 2011
By: Joshua Santor
Category: Gardens - Flower
If you have even departing awareness in the focus of farming with bulbs, then you should take a look at the following information. This enlightening expose presents some of the hottest hearsay on the specialty of gardening with bulbs.
The information about gardening with bulbs untaken here will do one of two gear: also it will underline what you understand gardening with bulbs or it will coach you something new. Both are good outcomes.
Bulbs are among the most admired of all flowering plants, due to their stamina, low estimate and beauty. It is hard to beat the redden selection of a plot bed bursting of bulbs, and planting bulbs that tint in different seasons can security a time extensive of charming plants.
This term focuses on a few of the most admired varieties of bulbs. Some of the most standard bulb varieties free to the home gardener enter: (more…)
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July 26, 2011
By: James Sawyers
Category: Gardens - Butterfly, Gardens - Flower, Gardens - Summer
There are many different reasons the different people finish to conceal summering gardens. One customary grounds that are fetching more admired these years as people to take to entertain their children through little equipment has done faster to home is to magnetize butterflies. This is much easier done than one might think if you live in the right environment for these pleasing creatures to prosper and fanfare.
Butterflies are striking creatures with very little life spans. For this goal they seem to be attracted to gorgeous effects during their midstream lives. Brightly painted plants invite butterflies in droves. This means that plants such as aster, marigold, black-eyed Susans, and butterfly weed are well known to invite butterflies.
Another thing you may crave to consider when selecting flora for the object of attracting these delightful winged creatures to your summer plot is the nectar. This is the important food for butterflies so a plot that is packed with more nectar producing plants is doable to gather more than its fare part of notice from the butterflies close. The bigger the choice of nectar producing flowers the greater the number of butterflies your backyard is prone to draw so be really to conceal abundance and abridge them in a behavior that produces ceiling flowers for utmost impact. (more…)
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July 15, 2011
By: Andrew Bicknell
Category: Gardens - All Season, Gardens - Butterfly, Gardens - Container, Gardens - Flower, Gardens - Indoors, Gardens - Rain, Gardens - Summer, Gardens - Water
Knowing the proper way to care for your flower garden can be the difference between a beautiful swath of flowers that everyone makes glowing comments on or a so-so garden that seems on the verge of dying all the time. As with all things learning the how to care for your garden can take time , but if you follow some of these basic tips you will be well on your way to having beautiful blooms all summer long.
1. Do you have the essentials covered? Just like any other plant, flowers are living growing organisms and without the proper necessities they will wither and die. They need a consistent water supply, varying amounts of sunlight depending on the plant, and rich fertile soil. The more pampered and cared for they are the better they will respond. During times of intense heat and little rain be sure to water more often. (more…)
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July 11, 2011
By: Jules Sims
Category: Gardens - Container, Gardens - Flower
The farmer of orchids is superior above other men. He belong with a sparkly-eyed fraternity, to whom, each small task, accomplished in its walk for the better ethnicity of his orchids, is a supplier of never-finish and absorbing delight. The beauty of the orchid’s line and flush is known to all who bask in the offerings of the florist’s chance.
The appearance of each new advance and burrow begin for delight; the slippery show of a snail or the cottony alarm of the presence of mount root for distress. The behavior and idiosyncrasies of every species and bury question to absorb examine. Different methods of upward and the relative virtues of hybrids and species are endlessly discussed among fellow growers. The orchid grower checks his mundane qualms at the door of the greenhouse and enters a world that offers surcease even to the middle heftily fraught with regret and hurt.
The beginnings of the orchid family are shrouded in mystery. Since most orchids are epiphytic – that is, having aerial roots through which they hear sustenance from the reserves in the moisture-loaded air of the tropics – they have left no traces such as the fossilized remains of ground-mounting plants. (more…)
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July 10, 2011
By: John Smi
Category: Gardens - Flower
When you look at any blooming flower, whether it is a tulip or a wildflower, you see the very last step of its evolution. Not all flora pioneer the same way, still. There is a difference between a tulip bulb and a seed that every gardener should know. To learn more, read the next information.
Let’s lead with the vital definition of an ordinary flower bulb. There are many different definitions you can find on farming websites. Here are two akin, but different definitions:
An underground folio bud enwrapped in plump scales or coats.
An underground storeroom organ made up of ample scales wrapped around one another from which plants and foliage are bent.
Let’s yank out the universal rudiments. A tulip bulb is the floor part of a tulip factory. When the bulb is planted in the soil and begins to come to life, roots and shoots beat through the outer roadblock. Roots dig deeper into the soil to assemble watering and nutrients. Shoots grow upward and disturb through the surface of the soil and grow into the green stand that bears a tulip flower.
A bulb is a “storage organ.” It stores food in the “thickset scales” around the “middle” of the bulb. That primary grows into next year’s stand. (more…)
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July 01, 2011
By: Joshua Santor
Category: Gardens - Flower
American visitors to the Old World are invariably impressed by the lively displays of container plants around homes, in gardens and parks, and in front of broadcast buildings and seats of interest.
In Lisbon, with its narrow, winding streets, where there is barely an ooze of sunlight, windowsills and tiny balconies are full with conserved plants. Often, they must compete with clothes hung out to dry. I retract one small circle that limited copious pot plants, some pieces of laundry, six song birds in cages, and three shouting green parrots friendly to their perches by chains.
Throughout Portugal, containers reach from tin cans, earth and bedecked fixed pots at entranceways and in small patios, to large calstone urns and pots in elegant, strict gardens, like that of the Queluz Palace slim Lisbon. In the moister north, pot plants are seen less frequently than in the hot and dry south, which has a more typically Mediterranean climate. (more…)
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June 26, 2011
By: Steve Boulden
Category: Gardens - Flower, Tips Tricks & Steps
Planting a wildflower meadow garden is a project that appeals to a lot of folks simply because they look good and require very little maintenance. Also, a wide assortment of flowers, grasses and plants can be grown together without any rigid specific design. This can be a simple way to create a surprisingly beautiful garden that is also very environmentally friendly. The blooms are colorful and plentiful so they provide a much appreciated, natural habitat for birds, butterflies and many other critters.
While being an ideal garden style for some locations, a wild meadow garden may seem like clutter to some folks. So there may be some things you should consider before creating one of your own.
If planting a wildflower meadow garden appeals to you because of no maintenance, you might want to reconsider. First, there ain’t no such thing as a no maintenance landscape or garden. It would be nice if it was so easy but all gardens need some maintenance. Wildflower meadow gardens only need a small amount of upkeep. However, you still have to watch out for weeds and keep the garden tidy. (more…)
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June 23, 2011
By: Jon Simms
Category: Gardens - Flower
To make sure that your prized roses remain in the best of health, simply follow these tips.
1. Black Spots on Leaves
This disease is commonly known as black spot. Black spots appear as circular with fringed edges on leaves. They cause the leaves to yellow. Remove the infected foliage and pick up any fallen leaves around the rose. Artificial sprays may be used to prevent or treat this kind of rose disease.
2. Stunted or malformed young canes
Known as powdery mildew, this is a fungal disease that covers leaves, stems and buds with wind spread white powder. It makes the leaves curl and turn purple. Spray with Funginex or Benomyl to treat this fungal disease.
3. Blistered underside of leaves
Known as rust, this disease is characterized by orange-red blisters that turn black in fall. It can survive the winter and will then attack new sprouts in the spring. Collect and discard leaves that are infected in fall. a Benomyl or Funginex spray every 7-10 days may help.
4. Malformed or stunted leaves and flowers
This is caused by spider mites. They are tiny yellow, red or green spiders found on the underside of leaves where they suck juices. The application of Orthene or Isotox may help in treating this infestation.
5. Weak and mottled leaves with tiny white webs under them
This is caused by aphids. They are small soft-bodied insects that usually brown, green or red. Often clustered under leaves and flower buds, they suck plant juices from tender buds. Malathion or diazinon spray may help roses to survive these bugs.
6. Flowers that don’t open or are deformed when they open.
Thrips could be the reason behind this problem. They are slender, brown-yellow bugs with fringed wings that also suck juices from flower buds. Cut and discard the infested flowers. Orthene and malathion may also treat this problem.
Remember that roses are hungry feeders that require much fertilizer to become healthy bushes.
Information on ground cherry can be found at the Cherry Facts site.
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June 12, 2011
By: Jules Sims
Category: Gardens - Container, Gardens - Flower
Orchid is a fantastic yard because it struck flower. However, orchid desires singular cares and interest from growers in problem they woud like it to grow up well and flower. Here are the basics to bury the lovely orchid.
The solo prevalent logic for orchid troubles is over watering. To inhibit this, you must adjust your watering to the factory’s environment. The environment includes temperature, damp, light, the category of pot and the sort of media. For example, an orchid preserved in peat/perlite mix in Florida requires much excluding water than one conserved in level bark in Arizona. Do not set a fixed watering schedule. Rather, eradicate the place mark from the pot and feel for mugginess. If it does not feel almost completely dry, storage off your watering. Try to water only in the morning so that the workshop has time to dry fairly before evil. When you do water, you should give the yard at slightest the equivalent of 1/3 the capacity for the pot. More are select. Problems come not from the total of water you give a skin, but with the frequency of watering. The orchid must get a venture to almost dry completely out before more water is added. With a few exceptions, such as with vandas in lath baskets, it is not a good idea to mist your orchid excepting in the early morning hours. (more…)
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